So now I learn that a commenter thinks I watch too many movies. Hmmpf. Anyone who subscribes to Netflix watches a lot of movies of course. Some people watch their Netflix movies instead of watching boob toob sitcoms, soaps, "news", etc.
Actually the case could be made that I watch few movies if "watching" refers to paying attention to a story. The stories are usually pretty uninteresting. If you've seen one adulterous love triangle, with its psycho-sexual obsessions, you've seen them all. Then there's rags to riches, revenge, who dunnit, poor boy meets rich girl, honest poor guy versus evil pol/priest/businessman, etc. I'll bet that a discriminating movie junkie could count on his fingers the movies that had good scripts, such as Network, All About Eve, Twelve Angry Men, Bridge over the River Kwai, Ikiru, The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Shakespeare in Love, The Mission, and Traitor.
You'd think that the recent commenter, visual sybarite (grin) that he is, would appreciate the mind-painting that comes from shopping around in the movies for images.
Comments
ramblinbob
Actually I need ideas these days for my Netflix queue; I was getting ready to cancel the subscription. So I'll give it a try. Thanks.
Bob
Whether one takes glorious refuge in movie mine-shafts or in vapid, self-indulgent ruminations of idle chit chat, one persons refuge is another persons prison ("Myra Breckinridge," 1970, and I'm sorry but most of the Star Trek episodes, metaphors or not).
I did, however, find humorous relief in "A Fish Called Wanda" last night. Nobody's perfect.
Neither Hollywood. Frozen River
and
Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus. Unless you grew up in the deep south, this one is a must see. IMHO
Bob